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Somerset Coalfield

The Somerset Coalfield in northern Somerset, England is an area where coal was mined from the 15th century until 1973. It is part of a larger coalfield which stretched into southern Gloucestershire. The Somerset coalfield stretched from Cromhall in the north to the Mendip Hills in the south, and from Bath in the east to Nailsea in the west, a total area of about 240 square miles (622 km2).[1] Most of the pits on the coalfield were concentrated in the Cam Brook, Wellow Brook and Nettlebridge Valleys and around Radstock and Farrington Gurney. The pits were grouped geographically, with clusters of pits close together working the same coal seams often under the same ownership. Many pits shared the trackways and tramways which connected them to the Somerset Coal Canal or railways for distribution.

The old coal mining sheave wheel, now featured in the centre of Radstock, in front of the Radstock Museum
Map of the Somerset Coalfields

The early pits were adits where coal outcropped or bell pits where coal was close to the surface. These methods were abandoned when deep seams were mined. The deepest shaft on the coalfield was at the Strap mine at Nettlebridge which reached 1,838 feet (560 m). Flooding and coal dust explosions in some mines required improved ventilation and pumping engines. Several pits closed in the 19th century as the coal was worked out. Those that survived until 1947 became part of the National Coal Board, but the expense of improving equipment and working conditions meant that these became uneconomical and the last pit closed in 1973. There is still evidence of the mine workings, with the remains of buildings, spoil heaps and tramways in the area.

Geology edit

Structure edit

The Somerset Coalfield covers a total area of about 240 square miles (622 km2).[1] It consists of three synclines, informally referred to as 'coal basins'. The Pensford Syncline in the north and the Radstock Syncline in the south are separated by the east–west trending Farmborough Fault Belt.[2] Further to the west is the smaller Nailsea Syncline.[2] The Radstock Syncline in particular is cut by a series of east–west thrust faults and north–south trending normal faults.[2]

Stratigraphy edit

 
William Smith.

The Coal Measures are divided into a Lower, Middle and Upper with coal seams found within each of these divisions. Lower and Middle Coal Measures are found at depths between 500 and 5,000 feet (150 and 1,520 m).[3] Together the Lower and Middle Coal Measures are 1,600 feet (490 m) thick with the Middle Coal Measures averaging about 500 and 5,000 feet and the Lower Coal Measures about 600 feet (180 m).[3]

Only in the southern part of the Radstock Syncline have coals of the Lower and Middle Coal Measures been worked, mainly at the Newbury and Vobster collieries in the southeast and in the New Rock and Moorewood pits to the southwest. Only in the eastern part of Pensford Syncline have coals of the Lower and Middle Coal Measures been worked, at the Globe Pit in the Newton St Loe area in the 19th century.[4] The Variscan orogeny involved lateral compression of the rock sequence resulting in the tight folding, fracturing and faulting of the sandstone and mudstone strata, and the associated Coal Measures. Along the Radstock Slide Fault the distance between the broken ends of a coal seam can be as much as 1,500 feet (457 m).[5] The complex geology and thin seams gained the field notoriety and three underground explosions, in 1893, 1895 and 1908 were amongst the first attributable solely to airborne coal dust.[6]

William Smith edit

Exploratory surveys of the local geology were carried out by William Smith, who became known as the "father of English geology", building on work by John Strachey.[7][8] Smith worked for the Stracheys who owned Sutton Court, at one of their older mines, the Mearns Pit at High Littleton.[9] As he observed the rock strata at the pit, he realised that they were arranged in a predictable pattern that the various strata could always be found in the same relative positions and each particular stratum could be identified by the fossils it contained and the same succession of fossil groups from older to younger rocks could be found in other parts of England. Smith noticed an easterly dip in the beds of rock—small near the surface (about three degrees) then greater after the Triassic rocks which led to him a testable hypothesis, which he termed the principle of faunal succession, and he began to determine if the relationships between the strata and their characteristics were consistent throughout the country.[10] During work as a surveyor (appointed by engineer John Rennie) for the Somerset Coal Canal Company and subsequently, he mapped the locations of rock strata, and their vertical extent, and drew cross-sections and tables of what he saw and earned the name "Strata Smith".[11]

Coal seams edit

The following coal seams are recognised within the coalfield. They are listed stratigraphically i.e. uppermost/youngest first. Note that not all seams are continuous across the coalfield and that correlation of some seams from one basin to another is uncertain.[3][12][13]

Coal measures Coal seams
Upper Coal Measures within the Pennant Sandstones Forty Yard Coal (Pensford), Withy Mills Coal, Great Coal, Middle Coal, ?Pensford No 2 Coal, Slyving Coal, Bull Coal, Bottom Little Coal, Rock Coal, Farrington Top Coal, Top Coal, ?Streak Coal, Peacock Coal, Middle Coal, No 5 Coal, ?Bromley No 4 Coal, New Coal, No 7 Coal, No 9 Coal, Big Coal, Brights Coal, No 10 Coal (splitting into Nos 8 & 9 Coals), No 11 Coal, Rudge Coal, Temple Cloud Coal, Newbury No 2 Coal, Newbury No 1 Coal, Globe Coal, Warkey Coal
Middle Coal Measures Garden Course Coal, Great Course Coal, Firestone Coal, Little Course Coal, Dungy Drift Coal, Coking Coal
Lower Coal Measures Standing Coal, Main Coal, Perrink Coal, White Axen Coal

History edit

It is believed that coal was mined in the area during Roman times[14] and there is documentary evidence of coal being dug on the Mendips in 1305[15][16] and at Kilmersdon in 1437. By the time of Henry VIII there were coal pits at Clutton, High Littleton and Stratton-on-the-Fosse.

During the early 17th century coal was largely obtained by excavating the outcrops and driving drifts which followed the seam into the ground. Only small amounts of coal could be obtained by these methods and bell pits were also dug.[17] These were vertical pits, with a 4-foot-diameter (1.2 m) shaft up to 60 feet (18 m) deep, which were opened out at the bottom. When all the coal that could safely be extracted from the pit had been recovered, another pit was sunk close by to intersect the seam and the waste from the second pit thrown into the first.[18]

At the beginning of the 19th century there were about 4,000 people employed on the coalfield.[19] The Somerset Miners' Association was founded in 1872, later becoming an area of the National Union of Mineworkers.[20]

The uses of coal were varied. Coal was used in limekilns to produce lime for mortar used in building and by farmers to improve the soil. From 1820 coal was used to produce gas for lighting and to power steam driven woollen mills in the area. Coke was used to dry malt for the brewing industry.[21]

Transport edit

 
Wagonloads of coal being hauled up Dunkerton Hill in the 1850s. Fanny Mayne, writing in The True Briton, complained of this unpleasant traffic,[22]"It is a very long hill, nearly two miles long, and up it are dragged nearly all the carts, waggons, and "noddies", loaded with coal, which supply Bath and its environs with that very necessary comfort, or comfortable necessary. A sad sight is Dunkerton Hill!"

The coalfield had a relatively low population density and did not have a major coal-consuming industry nearby. Transporting coal to market was a key problem for the coalfield's development. In the pre-turnpike era, the roads serving the coalfield were unsuited to moving coal. Bulley notes "The problem ... was rendered far worse by the state of the roads in Somerset, which were notorious down to the middle of the 18th century. Parishes in the area sometimes neglected or refused to repair those roads which were heavily used by coal carts. Thus in 1617 the inhabitants of Stoke St Michael ... complained that "of late by reason of many coalmines ... the highways there are much in decay and grown very founderous".[23]

In Somerset, turnpike roads began in 1707 with the establishment of the Bath Trust, but turnpikes did not reach the coalfield until the mid-1700s. The Bristol Trust, which passed close to the western boundary of the coalfield, established in 1727 was of little importance, as Bristol was never a significant market, having its own coalfield. Turnpikes facilitated the movement of coal, and John Billingsley[24] enthused "Nothing so much contributes to the improvement of a county as good roads. Before the establishment of turnpikes, many parts of the county were scarcely accessible. ... coal was carried on horses' backs to the distance of fifteen or twenty miles from the colliery; each horse carried about two hundred and half weight. Now one horse with a light cart will draw four hundred weight or four times more than a horse could carry. Can an insignificant toll be put in competition with this saving?"

 
Map of the Somerset Coal Canal

Not all roads were improved, and in 1819 John Skinner observed roads "rendered bad" by the passage of coal wagons.[25] Expansion of production was limited by access to market. Such a need implied a canal project, following Lord Middleton's dictum "Water transport is what all coal owners must aim at". There were large gains from being connected to a canal system, as stated by the Coal Commission: "At about this period (1800) the system of coal navigation was being rapidly extended, and the result was that coals were gradually finding their way into districts that could not be reached unless at great cost, by road".[26]

A scheme for an extension of the Avon Navigation was proposed in 1766, but canals did not reach the coalfield for almost another 50 years.[27] In 1794 coal proprietors formed a committee to construct the Somerset Coal Canal[28] with two branches into the Cam Brook and Wellow Brook Valleys, and from a junction at Midford, to join the proposed Kennet and Avon Canal at the Dundas Aqueduct near Bath. Coal was transported by the Somerset Coal Canal and later by the Bristol and North Somerset Railway and Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway, which were accessed from the pits by a series of tramways.[28] After 1854, when the first railway line was opened, the tonnage carried by the coal canal declined rapidly.

Decline and closure edit

The total tonnage of coal produced by the coalfield increased throughout the 19th century, reaching a peak around 1901, when there were 79 separate collieries and production was 1.25 million tons per annum.[29][30] The peak years for production were 1900 to 1920. However, decline took hold and the number of pits reduced from 30 at the beginning of the 20th century to 14 by the mid-1930s, twelve at nationalisation when the National Coal Board was created on 1 January 1947, under the Coal Industry Nationalisation Act 1946, five in 1959 and none after 1973.[31] Despite some investment in new infrastructure, particularly at Norton Hill,[30] thin seams made production expensive, limiting profit and investment. The conversion of Portishead power station from coal to oil and reduced national demand together with competition from more economical coalfields[32] led to the closure of the last two pits, Kilmersdon and Writhlington, in September 1973.[1][30]

Area today edit

Although there are still the remains of mines, disused or redeveloped buildings and a few spoil tips, most have been removed or landscaped,[33][34] the area has returned to a largely rural nature between the Mendip Hills and the River Avon in north east Somerset. The towns and villages have some light industry but are often commuter towns for Bath and Bristol. There are several limestone quarries particularly in the Mendips.[35]

The Colliers Way (NCR24) national cycle route passes landmarks associated with the coalfield,[36] and other roads and footpaths follow tramways developed during the coal mining years.[37] The cycleway runs from Dundas Aqueduct to Frome via Radstock,[38] and is intended to provide part of a continuous cycle route to Southampton and Portsmouth.

Radstock Museum has exhibits which offer an insight into life in north Somerset since the 19th century. Exhibits relate to the coalfield and its geology. Artefacts and memorabilia from the Somerset Coal Canal, Somerset and Dorset and Great Western Railways are also on display.[39]

Pensford coal basin edit

 
The Pensford Colliery winding house after conversion.

The Pensford coal basin is in the northern part of the coalfield around Bishop Sutton, Pensford, Stanton Drew, Farmborough and Hunstrete. At least one pit was operating near Bishop Sutton before 1719.[40] Four bell pits in Bishop Sutton were marked on field tithe No 1409, and four shaft pits on field tithe No 1428, but were no longer working by 1824.[41]

The Old Pit at Bishop Sutton, which was also known as Sutton Top Pit or Upper Sutton Pit was dug before 1799 and owned by Lieutenant Henry Fisher, who sold it in 1821 to Robert Blinman Dowling. After Dowling's death in 1852 the Old Pit was sold to Mr T.T. Hawkes,[42] but he defaulted on the payments and it was sold in 1853 to William Rees-Mogg (ancestor of journalist William Rees-Mogg) and his associates. The shaft reached a depth of 304 feet (93 m),[43] but the pit went out of production by 1855,[44] when "New Pit", which had been sunk in the early 19th century but then closed, was reopened and deepened to exploit deeper seams. New Pit had two shafts of 4 feet (1.2 m) in diameter, one for winding and one for pumping. In 1896 it was owned by F. Spencer of New Rock Colliery,[45] and in 1908 by Jesse Lovell and Sons.[46] By 1921 the pit employed 150 men and boys and produced 10,000 tins per annum.[47] The pit finally closed in 1929.[48][49]

Pensford Colliery, which opened in 1909, had the latest equipment at the time including coal cutters. It had a red-brick winding house, pithead baths and a coal washery. Faulting made coal production expensive and it closed in 1958.[30]

Earl of Warwick's Clutton Collieries edit

The Earl of Warwick's estates included sawmills, quarries, brickworks and collieries in addition to agricultural holdings. Bell pits, around Clutton and High Littleton, were described in a survey of 1610. All were closed by 1836.[56] The first deep mine in the parish of High Littleton was Mearns Coalworks which began in 1783.[57] The Greyfield Coal Company did not start until 1833 and expanded after the opening of the Bristol and North Somerset Railway in 1847.[58] Greyfield Colliery closed in 1911,[59] and the railway in 1964.[60] Maynard Terrace in Clutton was built to house some of the miners.

Paulton Basin edit

 
The spoil tip in Paulton, referred to locally as "The Batch"

Collieries in the Paulton basin were connected to the terminal basin of the northern branch of the Somerset Coal Canal which was the focus for tramroads that connected at least 15 collieries around Paulton, Timsbury and High Littleton. On the northern side of canal was the terminus for the tramroad which served Old Grove, Prior's, Tyning and Hayeswood pits, with a branch line to Amesbury and Mearns pits.[63] Parts of this line were still in use in 1873, probably carrying horse-drawn wagons of coal. The southern side of the canal basin was connected to the pits at Brittens, Littlebrook, Paulton Ham, Paulton Hill, Simons Hill by a tramway which terminated at Salisbury Colliery. In addition the Paulton Foundry used this line. The entire line was disused by 1871 as were the collieries it served.[63]

The area has been designated as an 'area of special architectural or historic interest, the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance' under section 69 of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990.[64]

Timsbury and Camerton edit

The first of the collieries around Timsbury village was sunk in 1791 and known as Conygre (Conigre in old spellings). Camerton Old Pit opened in 1781[66] and the shaft went down to 921 feet (281 m). It closed around circa 1898 but the shaft was then used as an airway and escape route for the New Pit, until 1930 when it was closed and capped. The New Pit was half a mile east of the Old Pit and went down to 1,818 feet (554 m). In 1928 it was joined underground to Braysdown Colliery and eventually closed in 1950.[67]

There is very little obvious landscape evidence remaining of the previous mining activities around Clutton, Temple Cloud, High Littleton and Timsbury. However, there is a very large Batch almost in the middle of Camerton that is now a designated Local Nature Reserve. The Batch was bare, like the Paulton ones until, according to locals, the wife of the owner of Camerton Court decided to pay for it to be planted with trees to improve the view. There are small batches at Clutton, east of Radford Hill and at Greyfields, High Littleton.[68]

East of Camerton edit

East of Camerton the coal is buried beneath newer rock strata, which meant that mining in the area was more difficult.[6]

The dominant features of the valleys of the Cam and Wellow Brooks are remnants of coal mining from the 18th to the 20th centuries. In both valleys there are frequent shafts and batches together with the remains of the railway and tram lines that connected the mines to the Avon Valley. Remains of the Somersetshire Coal Canal are also significant reminders of this coal mining history in this area.[73]

Farrington Gurney edit

 
Memorial to miners who lost their lives in a pit disaster in 1839

Mining around Farrington Gurney has been undertaken since the 17th century[76] where, by 1780, the pits were known as Farrington Colliery.

The main geological feature south of Hallatrow consists of Supra-Pennant Measures which include the upper coal measures and outcrops of sandstone. Relics of its industrial past are evident in the area, including the highly visible and distinct conical shaped Old Mills Batch with its generally unvegetated surface. The three disused colliery sites have been developed for light industry, a depot and a superstore.[77]

Duchy Mines edit

The Duchy of Cornwall owned most of the mineral rights around Midsomer Norton and various small pits opened around 1750 to exploit these.

Earl Waldegrave's Radstock Collieries edit

 
Old pit head buildings now an engineering works

In 1763 coal was discovered in Radstock and mining began[82] on land owned by the Waldegrave family, Lords of the Manor since the English Civil War. In 1896 the pits were owned by the Trustee of Frances, late Countess of Waldegrave.[45]

Radstock was the terminus for the southern branch of the Somerset Coal Canal which was subsequently turned into a tramway and became the centre for railway development and coal depots, coal washeries, workshops and a gas works. As part of the development of the Wiltshire, Somerset and Weymouth Railway, an 8-mile (13 km) line from Radstock to Frome was built to carry coal. In the 1870s the broad-gauge line was converted to standard gauge and connected to the Bristol and North Somerset Line connecting it to the Great Western Railway. The Radstock railway site comprises approximately 8.8 hectares of land which has been subject to planning and development applications.[83]

Writhlington Collieries edit

 
The Writhlington batch with miners' houses in the foreground

The Writhlington Collieries, close to the Waldegrave Collieries, were further east of Radstock and under different ownership. In 1896[45] they were owned by the Writhlington, Huish and Foxcote Colliery Co., and in 1908[46] by the Writhlington Collieries Co. Ltd. The Upper and Lower Writhlington, Huish & Foxcote pits were merged into a single colliery.[86]

The base of the Kilmersdon valley consists of alluvium deposits. Above these, on both sides of all of the valleys, is a band of shales and clays from the Penarth group from the Triassic period. Most of the upland in this area is Lias Limestone (white and blue) while the highest part, above 130 m, south of Haydon, is an outcrop of Inferior Oolitic Limestone, both are from the Jurassic period. The steepest slopes of both the Kilmersdon and Snail's Bottom valleys have frequently slipped. Below these rocks are the coal bearing Carboniferous strata. Haydon is an outlying settlement of Radstock built to house miners from the local pit. The disused railway line and inclined railway at Haydon are important elements in the Kilmersdon valley east of Haydon. The modern landscape has a less maintained and 'rougher' character and texture than neighbouring agricultural areas caused mainly by the remnants of the coal industry and its infrastructure and changes in agricultural management. Disturbance caused by coal mining and the railways and the subsequent end of mining and abandonment of the railways has created valuable habitats for nature conservation.[87]

The Writhlington spoil heap or "batch" is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) because of the rich collection of fossils in the spoil.[88] The Braysdown batch was planted with conifers, and is known as Braysdown Hill. The offices, blacksmith's shop and stables at the Upper Writhlington Colliery were converted into dwellings.[89]

Norton Hill Collieries edit

Norton Hill Collieries at Westfield were owned by members of the Beauchamp family such as Sir Frank Beauchamp and his brother Louis Beauchamp[95] who owned other collieries and related works on the coalfield at various times.[96] They were also known as the Beauchamp goldmines as they were the most productive mines in the whole coalfield.

In 1900 a railway linking the colliery to the main Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway was constructed, and sidings laid in 1905 and 1907 which were reconstructed in 1953.[97]

On 9 April 1908 an explosion approximately 1,500 feet (460 m) underground killed ten men and boys. As there were no mines rescue teams at that time, the manager and volunteers searched for survivors for 10 days. In 1911, partly as a result of the Norton Hill explosion, Winston Churchill was instrumental in the passing of the Coal Mines Act 1911.[98]

After nationalisation after World War II the National Coal Board spent £500,000 on modernising the mine's infrastructure to give it the capability for annual production of 315,000 tons; however, manpower shortages and geological problems caused the pit to close in 1966.[30]

Nettlebridge Valley edit

 
Old mine chimney of Oxley's Colliery near Buckland Dinham

There were numerous coal workings in the area from Gurney Slade east to Mells around the villages of Holcombe, Coleford and Stratton-on-the-Fosse. These included at least 52 bell pits, some with deeper shafts and 16 adits.[102] Some coal may have been mined during Roman times and in the 13th century, making them the earliest coal mines in Somerset, but most development occurred in the 17th century.[103] Most mining ended in the 19th century;[104] however, Strap Colliery was opened in 1953 as Mendip Colliery and worked until 1969.[105]

The Vobster Breach colliery had a unique system of long coking ovens which, along with the other buildings, have been designated as a Scheduled monument.[30][106] The boiler chimney of Oxley's Colliery near Buckland Dinham which operated for a few years in the 1880s is a Grade II listed building.[107][108]

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Bibliography edit

  • Allsop, Niall (1993). The Somersetshire Coal Canal Rediscovered: A Walker's Guide. Bath: Millstream Books. ISBN 978-0-948975-35-6.
  • Billingsley, John (1795). General View of the Agriculture of the County of Somerset. R. Cruttwell.
  • Clew, Kenneth R. (1970). The Somersetshire Coal Canal and Railways. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-4792-8.
  • Collier, Peter (1986). Colliers Way: The Somerset Coalfield. Ex Libris Press. ISBN 978-0-948578-05-2.
  • Coombs, Howard (1930). Rev. Arthur N. Bax (ed.). Journal of a Somerset Rector, John Skinner, A. M., Antiquary 1772-1839. Parochial affairs of the parish of Camerton, 1822-1832. British Library mss. nos. 33673-33728. London: John Murray. Revised and enlarged edition entitled Journal of a Somerset rector, 1803-1834: parochial affairs of the Parish of Camerton British Museum manuscripts no. 33635-33728 & EG 3099F-3123F. John Murray.
  • Cornwell, John (2005). Collieries of Somerset and Bristol. Landmark Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84306-170-0.
  • Coysh, A.W.; Mason, E.J.; Waite, V. (1977). The Mendips. London: Robert Hale Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7091-6426-5.
  • Down, C.G.; Warrington, A. J. (2005). The history of the Somerset coalfield. Radstock: Radstock Museum. ISBN 978-0-9551684-0-6.
  • Durham, Ian; Durham, Mary (1991). Chew Magna and the Chew Valley in old photographs. Redcliffe Press. ISBN 978-1-872971-61-2.
  • Green, G.W. (1992). Bristol and Gloucester Region (Regional Geology Guides) (3rd Ed). Keyworth, Notts: British Geological Survey. ISBN 978-0-11-884482-6.
  • Gould, Shane (1999). The Somerset Coalfield. Somerset Industrial Archaeological Society.
  • Halse, Roger; Castens, Simon (2000). The Somersetshire Coal Canal: A Pictorial Journey. Bath: Millstream Books. ISBN 978-0-948975-58-5.
  • Handley, Chris (2006). Transport & Industrial Development in the Somerset Coalfield. Radstock: Radstock, Midsomer Norton and District Museum Society.
  • Williams, W.J. (1976). Coal Mining in Bishop Sutton North Somerset c.1799-1929.

somerset, coalfield, northern, somerset, england, area, where, coal, mined, from, 15th, century, until, 1973, part, larger, coalfield, which, stretched, into, southern, gloucestershire, somerset, coalfield, stretched, from, cromhall, north, mendip, hills, sout. The Somerset Coalfield in northern Somerset England is an area where coal was mined from the 15th century until 1973 It is part of a larger coalfield which stretched into southern Gloucestershire The Somerset coalfield stretched from Cromhall in the north to the Mendip Hills in the south and from Bath in the east to Nailsea in the west a total area of about 240 square miles 622 km2 1 Most of the pits on the coalfield were concentrated in the Cam Brook Wellow Brook and Nettlebridge Valleys and around Radstock and Farrington Gurney The pits were grouped geographically with clusters of pits close together working the same coal seams often under the same ownership Many pits shared the trackways and tramways which connected them to the Somerset Coal Canal or railways for distribution The old coal mining sheave wheel now featured in the centre of Radstock in front of the Radstock MuseumMap of the Somerset Coalfields Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates The early pits were adits where coal outcropped or bell pits where coal was close to the surface These methods were abandoned when deep seams were mined The deepest shaft on the coalfield was at the Strap mine at Nettlebridge which reached 1 838 feet 560 m Flooding and coal dust explosions in some mines required improved ventilation and pumping engines Several pits closed in the 19th century as the coal was worked out Those that survived until 1947 became part of the National Coal Board but the expense of improving equipment and working conditions meant that these became uneconomical and the last pit closed in 1973 There is still evidence of the mine workings with the remains of buildings spoil heaps and tramways in the area Contents 1 Geology 1 1 Structure 1 2 Stratigraphy 1 3 William Smith 1 4 Coal seams 2 History 2 1 Transport 2 2 Decline and closure 2 3 Area today 3 Pensford coal basin 4 Earl of Warwick s Clutton Collieries 5 Paulton Basin 6 Timsbury and Camerton 7 East of Camerton 8 Farrington Gurney 9 Duchy Mines 10 Earl Waldegrave s Radstock Collieries 11 Writhlington Collieries 12 Norton Hill Collieries 13 Nettlebridge Valley 14 References 15 BibliographyGeology editStructure edit The Somerset Coalfield covers a total area of about 240 square miles 622 km2 1 It consists of three synclines informally referred to as coal basins The Pensford Syncline in the north and the Radstock Syncline in the south are separated by the east west trending Farmborough Fault Belt 2 Further to the west is the smaller Nailsea Syncline 2 The Radstock Syncline in particular is cut by a series of east west thrust faults and north south trending normal faults 2 Stratigraphy edit nbsp William Smith The Coal Measures are divided into a Lower Middle and Upper with coal seams found within each of these divisions Lower and Middle Coal Measures are found at depths between 500 and 5 000 feet 150 and 1 520 m 3 Together the Lower and Middle Coal Measures are 1 600 feet 490 m thick with the Middle Coal Measures averaging about 500 and 5 000 feet and the Lower Coal Measures about 600 feet 180 m 3 Only in the southern part of the Radstock Syncline have coals of the Lower and Middle Coal Measures been worked mainly at the Newbury and Vobster collieries in the southeast and in the New Rock and Moorewood pits to the southwest Only in the eastern part of Pensford Syncline have coals of the Lower and Middle Coal Measures been worked at the Globe Pit in the Newton St Loe area in the 19th century 4 The Variscan orogeny involved lateral compression of the rock sequence resulting in the tight folding fracturing and faulting of the sandstone and mudstone strata and the associated Coal Measures Along the Radstock Slide Fault the distance between the broken ends of a coal seam can be as much as 1 500 feet 457 m 5 The complex geology and thin seams gained the field notoriety and three underground explosions in 1893 1895 and 1908 were amongst the first attributable solely to airborne coal dust 6 William Smith edit Exploratory surveys of the local geology were carried out by William Smith who became known as the father of English geology building on work by John Strachey 7 8 Smith worked for the Stracheys who owned Sutton Court at one of their older mines the Mearns Pit at High Littleton 9 As he observed the rock strata at the pit he realised that they were arranged in a predictable pattern that the various strata could always be found in the same relative positions and each particular stratum could be identified by the fossils it contained and the same succession of fossil groups from older to younger rocks could be found in other parts of England Smith noticed an easterly dip in the beds of rock small near the surface about three degrees then greater after the Triassic rocks which led to him a testable hypothesis which he termed the principle of faunal succession and he began to determine if the relationships between the strata and their characteristics were consistent throughout the country 10 During work as a surveyor appointed by engineer John Rennie for the Somerset Coal Canal Company and subsequently he mapped the locations of rock strata and their vertical extent and drew cross sections and tables of what he saw and earned the name Strata Smith 11 Coal seams edit The following coal seams are recognised within the coalfield They are listed stratigraphically i e uppermost youngest first Note that not all seams are continuous across the coalfield and that correlation of some seams from one basin to another is uncertain 3 12 13 Coal measures Coal seamsUpper Coal Measures within the Pennant Sandstones Forty Yard Coal Pensford Withy Mills Coal Great Coal Middle Coal Pensford No 2 Coal Slyving Coal Bull Coal Bottom Little Coal Rock Coal Farrington Top Coal Top Coal Streak Coal Peacock Coal Middle Coal No 5 Coal Bromley No 4 Coal New Coal No 7 Coal No 9 Coal Big Coal Brights Coal No 10 Coal splitting into Nos 8 amp 9 Coals No 11 Coal Rudge Coal Temple Cloud Coal Newbury No 2 Coal Newbury No 1 Coal Globe Coal Warkey CoalMiddle Coal Measures Garden Course Coal Great Course Coal Firestone Coal Little Course Coal Dungy Drift Coal Coking CoalLower Coal Measures Standing Coal Main Coal Perrink Coal White Axen CoalHistory editIt is believed that coal was mined in the area during Roman times 14 and there is documentary evidence of coal being dug on the Mendips in 1305 15 16 and at Kilmersdon in 1437 By the time of Henry VIII there were coal pits at Clutton High Littleton and Stratton on the Fosse During the early 17th century coal was largely obtained by excavating the outcrops and driving drifts which followed the seam into the ground Only small amounts of coal could be obtained by these methods and bell pits were also dug 17 These were vertical pits with a 4 foot diameter 1 2 m shaft up to 60 feet 18 m deep which were opened out at the bottom When all the coal that could safely be extracted from the pit had been recovered another pit was sunk close by to intersect the seam and the waste from the second pit thrown into the first 18 At the beginning of the 19th century there were about 4 000 people employed on the coalfield 19 The Somerset Miners Association was founded in 1872 later becoming an area of the National Union of Mineworkers 20 The uses of coal were varied Coal was used in limekilns to produce lime for mortar used in building and by farmers to improve the soil From 1820 coal was used to produce gas for lighting and to power steam driven woollen mills in the area Coke was used to dry malt for the brewing industry 21 Transport edit nbsp Wagonloads of coal being hauled up Dunkerton Hill in the 1850s Fanny Mayne writing in The True Briton complained of this unpleasant traffic 22 It is a very long hill nearly two miles long and up it are dragged nearly all the carts waggons and noddies loaded with coal which supply Bath and its environs with that very necessary comfort or comfortable necessary A sad sight is Dunkerton Hill The coalfield had a relatively low population density and did not have a major coal consuming industry nearby Transporting coal to market was a key problem for the coalfield s development In the pre turnpike era the roads serving the coalfield were unsuited to moving coal Bulley notes The problem was rendered far worse by the state of the roads in Somerset which were notorious down to the middle of the 18th century Parishes in the area sometimes neglected or refused to repair those roads which were heavily used by coal carts Thus in 1617 the inhabitants of Stoke St Michael complained that of late by reason of many coalmines the highways there are much in decay and grown very founderous 23 In Somerset turnpike roads began in 1707 with the establishment of the Bath Trust but turnpikes did not reach the coalfield until the mid 1700s The Bristol Trust which passed close to the western boundary of the coalfield established in 1727 was of little importance as Bristol was never a significant market having its own coalfield Turnpikes facilitated the movement of coal and John Billingsley 24 enthused Nothing so much contributes to the improvement of a county as good roads Before the establishment of turnpikes many parts of the county were scarcely accessible coal was carried on horses backs to the distance of fifteen or twenty miles from the colliery each horse carried about two hundred and half weight Now one horse with a light cart will draw four hundred weight or four times more than a horse could carry Can an insignificant toll be put in competition with this saving nbsp Map of the Somerset Coal CanalNot all roads were improved and in 1819 John Skinner observed roads rendered bad by the passage of coal wagons 25 Expansion of production was limited by access to market Such a need implied a canal project following Lord Middleton s dictum Water transport is what all coal owners must aim at There were large gains from being connected to a canal system as stated by the Coal Commission At about this period 1800 the system of coal navigation was being rapidly extended and the result was that coals were gradually finding their way into districts that could not be reached unless at great cost by road 26 A scheme for an extension of the Avon Navigation was proposed in 1766 but canals did not reach the coalfield for almost another 50 years 27 In 1794 coal proprietors formed a committee to construct the Somerset Coal Canal 28 with two branches into the Cam Brook and Wellow Brook Valleys and from a junction at Midford to join the proposed Kennet and Avon Canal at the Dundas Aqueduct near Bath Coal was transported by the Somerset Coal Canal and later by the Bristol and North Somerset Railway and Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway which were accessed from the pits by a series of tramways 28 After 1854 when the first railway line was opened the tonnage carried by the coal canal declined rapidly Decline and closure edit The total tonnage of coal produced by the coalfield increased throughout the 19th century reaching a peak around 1901 when there were 79 separate collieries and production was 1 25 million tons per annum 29 30 The peak years for production were 1900 to 1920 However decline took hold and the number of pits reduced from 30 at the beginning of the 20th century to 14 by the mid 1930s twelve at nationalisation when the National Coal Board was created on 1 January 1947 under the Coal Industry Nationalisation Act 1946 five in 1959 and none after 1973 31 Despite some investment in new infrastructure particularly at Norton Hill 30 thin seams made production expensive limiting profit and investment The conversion of Portishead power station from coal to oil and reduced national demand together with competition from more economical coalfields 32 led to the closure of the last two pits Kilmersdon and Writhlington in September 1973 1 30 Area today edit Although there are still the remains of mines disused or redeveloped buildings and a few spoil tips most have been removed or landscaped 33 34 the area has returned to a largely rural nature between the Mendip Hills and the River Avon in north east Somerset The towns and villages have some light industry but are often commuter towns for Bath and Bristol There are several limestone quarries particularly in the Mendips 35 The Colliers Way NCR24 national cycle route passes landmarks associated with the coalfield 36 and other roads and footpaths follow tramways developed during the coal mining years 37 The cycleway runs from Dundas Aqueduct to Frome via Radstock 38 and is intended to provide part of a continuous cycle route to Southampton and Portsmouth Radstock Museum has exhibits which offer an insight into life in north Somerset since the 19th century Exhibits relate to the coalfield and its geology Artefacts and memorabilia from the Somerset Coal Canal Somerset and Dorset and Great Western Railways are also on display 39 Pensford coal basin edit nbsp The Pensford Colliery winding house after conversion The Pensford coal basin is in the northern part of the coalfield around Bishop Sutton Pensford Stanton Drew Farmborough and Hunstrete At least one pit was operating near Bishop Sutton before 1719 40 Four bell pits in Bishop Sutton were marked on field tithe No 1409 and four shaft pits on field tithe No 1428 but were no longer working by 1824 41 The Old Pit at Bishop Sutton which was also known as Sutton Top Pit or Upper Sutton Pit was dug before 1799 and owned by Lieutenant Henry Fisher who sold it in 1821 to Robert Blinman Dowling After Dowling s death in 1852 the Old Pit was sold to Mr T T Hawkes 42 but he defaulted on the payments and it was sold in 1853 to William Rees Mogg ancestor of journalist William Rees Mogg and his associates The shaft reached a depth of 304 feet 93 m 43 but the pit went out of production by 1855 44 when New Pit which had been sunk in the early 19th century but then closed was reopened and deepened to exploit deeper seams New Pit had two shafts of 4 feet 1 2 m in diameter one for winding and one for pumping In 1896 it was owned by F Spencer of New Rock Colliery 45 and in 1908 by Jesse Lovell and Sons 46 By 1921 the pit employed 150 men and boys and produced 10 000 tins per annum 47 The pit finally closed in 1929 48 49 Pensford Colliery which opened in 1909 had the latest equipment at the time including coal cutters It had a red brick winding house pithead baths and a coal washery Faulting made coal production expensive and it closed in 1958 30 Pits of the Pensford coal basinColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m Max shaft depth ft m NotesBishop Sutton old Bishop Sutton 51 20 07 N 2 35 37 W 51 3353 N 2 5935 W 51 3353 2 5935 Bishop Sutton old c1811 1855 304 92 7 50 Bought by William Rees Mogg in 1835Bishop Sutton new Bishop Sutton 51 20 07 N 2 35 37 W 51 3353 N 2 5935 W 51 3353 2 5935 Bishop Sutton new 1855 1929 49 9 0 2 7 50 877 267 3 50 1896 owned by F Spencer New Rock Colliery 45 1908 owned by J Lovell and Sons 46 Bromley Pensford 51 22 17 N 2 32 53 W 51 3715 N 2 5480 W 51 3715 2 5480 Bromley 1860 51 1957 52 4 6 1 4 53 475 144 8 53 1896 45 amp 1908 Owned by Bromley Coal Co Ltd 46 Common Wood Level Hunstrete 51 21 36 N 2 30 28 W 51 3600 N 2 5077 W 51 3600 2 5077 Common Wood Level 1829 1832 No coal mined Attempts made again in 1969 but unsuccessfulFarmborough Farmborough 51 20 35 N 2 29 04 W 51 3430 N 2 4845 W 51 3430 2 4845 Famborough c1841 1847 1413 430 7 50 No coal minedPensford Pensford 51 21 45 N 2 32 52 W 51 3625 N 2 5479 W 51 3625 2 5479 Pensford 1909 54 1955 55 14 0 4 3 50 1494 445 4 50 Rydon s or Riding s Stanton Drew 51 22 01 N 2 34 47 W 51 3669 N 2 5796 W 51 3669 2 5796 Rydon s 1808 1833 312 95 50 Earl of Warwick s Clutton Collieries editThe Earl of Warwick s estates included sawmills quarries brickworks and collieries in addition to agricultural holdings Bell pits around Clutton and High Littleton were described in a survey of 1610 All were closed by 1836 56 The first deep mine in the parish of High Littleton was Mearns Coalworks which began in 1783 57 The Greyfield Coal Company did not start until 1833 and expanded after the opening of the Bristol and North Somerset Railway in 1847 58 Greyfield Colliery closed in 1911 59 and the railway in 1964 60 Maynard Terrace in Clutton was built to house some of the miners Pits of the Earl of Warwick s Clutton CollieriesColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m Max shaft depth ft m NotesBurchells sometimes spelt Burchills or Birchill s 61 Clutton 51 19 55 N 2 32 20 W 51 3320 N 2 5389 W 51 3320 2 5389 Burchells 1911 reopened 61 1921 61 148 45 1 62 Fry s Bottom Clutton 51 20 28 N 2 32 15 W 51 3410 N 2 5376 W 51 3410 2 5376 Fry s Bottom 1830s 61 1885 49 9 0 2 7 62 588 179 2 62 Greyfield Clutton 51 19 30 N 2 30 57 W 51 3249 N 2 5159 W 51 3249 2 5159 Greyfield 1833 1911 49 61 10 0 3 62 900 274 3 62 1908 46 Owned by Greyfield Colliery Co Ltd Mooresland Clutton 51 19 30 N 2 30 57 W 51 3249 N 2 5159 W 51 3249 2 5159 Mooresland 1840s Output transferred to nearby GreyfieldPaulton Basin edit nbsp The spoil tip in Paulton referred to locally as The Batch Collieries in the Paulton basin were connected to the terminal basin of the northern branch of the Somerset Coal Canal which was the focus for tramroads that connected at least 15 collieries around Paulton Timsbury and High Littleton On the northern side of canal was the terminus for the tramroad which served Old Grove Prior s Tyning and Hayeswood pits with a branch line to Amesbury and Mearns pits 63 Parts of this line were still in use in 1873 probably carrying horse drawn wagons of coal The southern side of the canal basin was connected to the pits at Brittens Littlebrook Paulton Ham Paulton Hill Simons Hill by a tramway which terminated at Salisbury Colliery In addition the Paulton Foundry used this line The entire line was disused by 1871 as were the collieries it served 63 The area has been designated as an area of special architectural or historic interest the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance under section 69 of the Planning Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas Act 1990 64 Pits of the Paulton BasinColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 65 Max shaft depth ft m 65 NotesAmesbury High Littleton 51 19 40 N 2 29 40 W 51 3277 N 2 4944 W 51 3277 2 4944 Amesbury before 1701 early 19th century 200 61 Brewers Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Brewers before 1700 102 31 Brittens Lower Paulton 51 18 22 N 2 29 34 W 51 3061 N 2 4927 W 51 3061 2 4927 Brittens Lower by 1864 Brittens New Paulton 51 18 22 N 2 29 34 W 51 3061 N 2 4927 W 51 3061 2 4927 Brittens New by 1864 Brombel or Brombells possibly Allens Paddock Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Brombel before 1793 4 6 1 4 Crossways Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Crossways 5 1 5 144 43 9 Goosard or Gooseward or Goosewardsham or Paulton Lower Engine Paulton 51 18 58 N 2 29 45 W 51 3160 N 2 4957 W 51 3160 2 4957 Goosard 1708 Hayeswood Timsbury 51 19 53 N 2 29 35 W 51 331306 N 2 492985 W 51 331306 2 492985 Hayeswood 1750 1862 6 0 1 8 642 195 7 Heighgrove or Woody Heighgrove Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Heighgrove 1753 1819 Littlebrook Paulton 51 18 15 N 2 30 05 W 51 3043 N 2 5013 W 51 3043 2 5013 Littlebrook c1850s 5 0 1 5 215 65 5 Mearns High Littleton 51 19 40 N 2 30 00 W 51 3277 N 2 5001 W 51 3277 2 5001 Mearns 1783 1824 4 6 1 4 279 85 New Grove possibly also Priors Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 New Grove 1792 Tyning Timsbury 51 19 36 N 2 29 24 W 51 3268 N 2 4901 W 51 3268 2 4901 Tyning 1766 Old amp New PitsOld Grove Paulton 51 19 11 N 2 29 13 W 51 3196 N 2 487 W 51 3196 2 487 Old Grove 4 6 1 4 4185 1373 Paulton Bottom Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Paulton Bottom 4 6 1 4 60 18 3 Paulton Engine Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Paulton Engine before 1750 9 0 2 75 609 185 6 Next to Paulton Brass and Iron foundryPaulton Ham Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Paulton Ham c1830s 1964 6 0 1 83 552 168 2 Paulton Hill Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Paulton Hill 1840 1864 798 243 2 Radford Paulton 51 19 04 N 2 28 12 W 51 3179 N 2 4699 W 51 3179 2 4699 Radford c1800 1847 6 1 8 1152 351 1 Salisbury Paulton 51 17 59 N 2 29 28 W 51 2998 N 2 4912 W 51 2998 2 4912 Salisbury 1792 1873 6 1 8 150 45 7 Simons Hill also known as Simmons Hill Paulton 51 18 28 N 2 30 10 W 51 3079 N 2 5028 W 51 3079 2 5028 Simons Hill 1811 1844 4 6 1 4 672 204 8 Withy Mills Paulton 51 19 04 N 2 29 14 W 51 3178 N 2 4871 W 51 3178 2 4871 Withy Mills 1804 1877 4 6 1 4 804 245 Timsbury and Camerton editThe first of the collieries around Timsbury village was sunk in 1791 and known as Conygre Conigre in old spellings Camerton Old Pit opened in 1781 66 and the shaft went down to 921 feet 281 m It closed around circa 1898 but the shaft was then used as an airway and escape route for the New Pit until 1930 when it was closed and capped The New Pit was half a mile east of the Old Pit and went down to 1 818 feet 554 m In 1928 it was joined underground to Braysdown Colliery and eventually closed in 1950 67 There is very little obvious landscape evidence remaining of the previous mining activities around Clutton Temple Cloud High Littleton and Timsbury However there is a very large Batch almost in the middle of Camerton that is now a designated Local Nature Reserve The Batch was bare like the Paulton ones until according to locals the wife of the owner of Camerton Court decided to pay for it to be planted with trees to improve the view There are small batches at Clutton east of Radford Hill and at Greyfields High Littleton 68 Pits of the Timsbury and Camerton CollieriesColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 69 Max shaft depth ft m 69 NotesCamerton New Camerton 51 19 11 N 2 26 54 W 51 3198 N 2 4484 W 51 3198 2 4484 Camerton New 1800 1950 70 8 0 2 4 1818 554 1 a lesser depth before 1800 Site of a massive coal dust explosion at Camerton New in 1893 which killed two miners 71 Camerton Old Camerton 51 19 15 N 2 27 36 W 51 3207 N 2 4599 W 51 3207 2 4599 Camerton Old 1781 1898 7 0 2 1 921 280 7 67 1896 45 amp 1908 46 owned by Miss E E Jarrett Lower Congyre Timsbury 51 19 24 N 2 28 02 W 51 3233 N 2 4671 W 51 3233 2 4671 Lower Conygre 1847 1916 8 0 2 4 1128 343 8 Merger of Upper and Lower pits 1896 45 owned by Samborne Smith and Company 1908 46 Owned by Beaumont Kennedy and CoRadford Timsbury 51 19 14 N 2 29 09 W 51 3205 N 2 4857 W 51 3205 2 4857 Radford 6 0 1 8 1152 351 1 1906 46 Owned by Earl of WaldegraveUpper Congyre Timsbury 51 19 43 N 2 28 48 W 51 3287 N 2 4800 W 51 3287 2 4800 Upper Conygre 1791 1916 8 0 2 4 1038 316 4 Merger of Upper and Lower pits 1896 45 owned by Samborne Smith and Company 1908 46 Owned by Beaumont Kennedy and Co On 6 February 1895 the pit was the site of an explosion which killed seven men 72 East of Camerton editEast of Camerton the coal is buried beneath newer rock strata which meant that mining in the area was more difficult 6 The dominant features of the valleys of the Cam and Wellow Brooks are remnants of coal mining from the 18th to the 20th centuries In both valleys there are frequent shafts and batches together with the remains of the railway and tram lines that connected the mines to the Avon Valley Remains of the Somersetshire Coal Canal are also significant reminders of this coal mining history in this area 73 Pits to the east of CamertonColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 74 Max shaft depth ft m 74 NotesBengrove also called Priston Old and Dunkerton between Camerton and Tunley 51 19 27 N 2 26 44 W 51 3243 N 2 4455 W 51 3243 2 4455 Bengrove 1764 c1774 506 154 2 Dunkerton Dunkerton 51 20 00 N 2 24 30 W 51 3334 N 2 4083 W 51 3334 2 4083 Dunkerton 1904 1925 75 1933 49 10 3 1651 503 2 Poor working conditions led to riots in 1908 9Hills also known as Priston or Dunkerton New Tunley 51 19 53 N 2 27 05 W 51 3315 N 2 4514 W 51 3315 2 4514 Hills 1792 1824 Priston also known as Tunley Tunley 51 20 36 N 2 26 29 W 51 3432 N 2 4414 W 51 3432 2 4414 Priston 1914 1930 49 8 2 4 750 228 6 Last deep mine to be opened in Somerset Farrington Gurney edit nbsp Memorial to miners who lost their lives in a pit disaster in 1839Mining around Farrington Gurney has been undertaken since the 17th century 76 where by 1780 the pits were known as Farrington Colliery The main geological feature south of Hallatrow consists of Supra Pennant Measures which include the upper coal measures and outcrops of sandstone Relics of its industrial past are evident in the area including the highly visible and distinct conical shaped Old Mills Batch with its generally unvegetated surface The three disused colliery sites have been developed for light industry a depot and a superstore 77 Pits of Farrington GurneyColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 78 Max shaft depth ft m 78 NotesChurch Field also known as Farrington of Ruett Slant Farrington Gurney 51 18 05 N 2 31 22 W 51 3015 N 2 5228 W 51 3015 2 5228 Church Field 1921 1923 Drift Mine transferred to Marsh LaneFarrington Farrington Gurney 51 18 05 N 2 31 22 W 51 3015 N 2 5228 W 51 3015 2 5228 Farrington 1782 1923 49 9 2 7 588 179 2 Marsh Lane Farrington Gurney 51 17 39 N 2 31 22 W 51 2943 N 2 5227 W 51 2943 2 5227 Marsh Lane 1921 79 1949 79 visited by the Prince of Wales on 7 July 1934Old Mills Midsomer Norton 51 17 33 N 2 30 14 W 51 2926 N 2 5040 W 51 2926 2 5040 Old Mills 1860 80 1966 80 11 3 4 1098 334 7 Merged with SpringfieldSpringfield Midsomer Norton 51 17 33 N 2 30 14 W 51 2926 N 2 5040 W 51 2926 2 5040 Springfield 1872 1966 9 6 2 9 965 294 1 Merged with Old Mills Owned by W Evans and Co 46 Duchy Mines editThe Duchy of Cornwall owned most of the mineral rights around Midsomer Norton and various small pits opened around 1750 to exploit these Pits of the Duchy MinesColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 81 Max shaft depth ft m 81 NotesClandown Clandown 51 18 10 N 2 27 24 W 51 3027 N 2 4568 W 51 3027 2 4568 Clandown 1811 1929 6 1 8 1437 438 1896 owned by Trustees of the late C Hollwey 45 1908 Owned by Clandown Colliery CoOld Welton Midsomer Norton 51 16 52 N 2 27 39 W 51 2811 N 2 4609 W 51 2811 2 4609 Old Welton 1783 1896 4 6 1 4 1646 501 7 Merged with Clandown 1896 45 owned by Old Welton Colliery Co 1908 Owned by Clandown Colliery CoWelton Hill Midsomer Norton 51 17 50 N 2 28 36 W 51 2972 N 2 4768 W 51 2972 2 4768 Welton Hill 1813 1896 6 1 8 605 184 4 Earl Waldegrave s Radstock Collieries edit nbsp Old pit head buildings now an engineering worksIn 1763 coal was discovered in Radstock and mining began 82 on land owned by the Waldegrave family Lords of the Manor since the English Civil War In 1896 the pits were owned by the Trustee of Frances late Countess of Waldegrave 45 Radstock was the terminus for the southern branch of the Somerset Coal Canal which was subsequently turned into a tramway and became the centre for railway development and coal depots coal washeries workshops and a gas works As part of the development of the Wiltshire Somerset and Weymouth Railway an 8 mile 13 km line from Radstock to Frome was built to carry coal In the 1870s the broad gauge line was converted to standard gauge and connected to the Bristol and North Somerset Line connecting it to the Great Western Railway The Radstock railway site comprises approximately 8 8 hectares of land which has been subject to planning and development applications 83 Pits of Earl Waldegrave s Radstock CollieriesColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 84 Max shaft depth ft m 84 NotesLudlows Radstock 51 17 09 N 2 26 22 W 51 2857 N 2 4394 W 51 2857 2 4394 Ludlows before 1790 85 1954 85 8 2 4 85 1686 531 1 Middle Pit Radstock 51 17 41 N 2 27 04 W 51 2946 N 2 4510 W 51 2946 2 4510 Middle Pit before 1801 1933 10 3 1791 545 9 Old Pit Radstock 51 17 41 N 2 27 04 W 51 2946 N 2 4510 W 51 2946 2 4510 Old Pit before 1800 1858 6 1 8 942 287 1 Smallcombe Radstock 51 17 47 N 2 27 09 W 51 2964 N 2 4525 W 51 2964 2 4525 Smallcombe 1797 1854 7 2 1 1074 327 4 Tyning Radstock 51 17 34 N 2 25 56 W 51 2929 N 2 4323 W 51 2929 2 4323 Tyning 1837 1909 8 2 4 1007 306 9 Wellsway Westfield 51 16 06 N 2 29 32 W 51 2684 N 2 4923 W 51 2684 2 4923 Wellsway 1829 1920 4 6 1 4 754 229 8 Writhlington Collieries edit nbsp The Writhlington batch with miners houses in the foregroundThe Writhlington Collieries close to the Waldegrave Collieries were further east of Radstock and under different ownership In 1896 45 they were owned by the Writhlington Huish and Foxcote Colliery Co and in 1908 46 by the Writhlington Collieries Co Ltd The Upper and Lower Writhlington Huish amp Foxcote pits were merged into a single colliery 86 The base of the Kilmersdon valley consists of alluvium deposits Above these on both sides of all of the valleys is a band of shales and clays from the Penarth group from the Triassic period Most of the upland in this area is Lias Limestone white and blue while the highest part above 130 m south of Haydon is an outcrop of Inferior Oolitic Limestone both are from the Jurassic period The steepest slopes of both the Kilmersdon and Snail s Bottom valleys have frequently slipped Below these rocks are the coal bearing Carboniferous strata Haydon is an outlying settlement of Radstock built to house miners from the local pit The disused railway line and inclined railway at Haydon are important elements in the Kilmersdon valley east of Haydon The modern landscape has a less maintained and rougher character and texture than neighbouring agricultural areas caused mainly by the remnants of the coal industry and its infrastructure and changes in agricultural management Disturbance caused by coal mining and the railways and the subsequent end of mining and abandonment of the railways has created valuable habitats for nature conservation 87 The Writhlington spoil heap or batch is a Site of Special Scientific Interest SSSI because of the rich collection of fossils in the spoil 88 The Braysdown batch was planted with conifers and is known as Braysdown Hill The offices blacksmith s shop and stables at the Upper Writhlington Colliery were converted into dwellings 89 Pits of the Writhlington CollieriesColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 90 Max shaft depth ft m 90 NotesBraysdown Peasedown St John 51 18 39 N 2 25 31 W 51 3109 N 2 4253 W 51 3109 2 4253 Braysdown 1845 91 1959 10 3 92 1834 559 1896 owned by Danbeny and Scobel 45 1908 Owned by Braysdown Colliery Co 46 At nationalisation in 1947 it was producing 37 250 tons 92 Foxcote Foxcote 51 17 57 N 2 24 29 W 51 2993 N 2 4080 W 51 2993 2 4080 Foxcote 1853 1931 9 2 7 1416 431 6 1896 45 owned by Writhlington Huish and Foxcote Colliery Co Huish Kilmersdon 51 16 04 N 2 25 20 W 51 2677 N 2 4221 W 51 2677 2 4221 Huish 1822 1912 8 2 4 570 173 7 1896 45 owned by Writhlington Huish and Foxcote Colliery Co Kilmersdon Kilmersdon 51 15 44 N 2 26 11 W 51 2623 N 2 4364 W 51 2623 2 4364 Kilmersdon 1875 1973 93 10 6 3 2 1582 482 2 1896 45 amp 1908 46 owned by Kilmersdon Colliery Co Lower Writhlington Writhlington 51 17 41 N 2 25 31 W 51 2947 N 2 4252 W 51 2947 2 4252 Lower Writhlington 1829 10 3 1461 445 3 Shoscombe Shoscombe 51 18 23 N 2 24 50 W 51 3064 N 2 4138 W 51 3064 2 4138 Shoscombe c1828 by 1860 10 7 3 2 360 109 7 Woodborough also known as Wodborough Old Pit east of Radstock 51 18 23 N 2 26 07 W 51 3064 N 2 4353 W 51 3064 2 4353 Woodborough 1840s 5 3 1 6 426 129 8 Upper Writhligton Radstock 51 17 34 N 2 25 56 W 51 2929 N 2 4323 W 51 2929 2 4323 Upper Writhlington 1805 1972 94 11 3 3 4 942 287 1 Norton Hill Collieries editNorton Hill Collieries at Westfield were owned by members of the Beauchamp family such as Sir Frank Beauchamp and his brother Louis Beauchamp 95 who owned other collieries and related works on the coalfield at various times 96 They were also known as the Beauchamp goldmines as they were the most productive mines in the whole coalfield In 1900 a railway linking the colliery to the main Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway was constructed and sidings laid in 1905 and 1907 which were reconstructed in 1953 97 On 9 April 1908 an explosion approximately 1 500 feet 460 m underground killed ten men and boys As there were no mines rescue teams at that time the manager and volunteers searched for survivors for 10 days In 1911 partly as a result of the Norton Hill explosion Winston Churchill was instrumental in the passing of the Coal Mines Act 1911 98 After nationalisation after World War II the National Coal Board spent 500 000 on modernising the mine s infrastructure to give it the capability for annual production of 315 000 tons however manpower shortages and geological problems caused the pit to close in 1966 30 Pits of the Norton Hill CollieriesColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 99 Max shaft depth ft m 99 NotesNorton Hill New Westfield 51 16 48 N 2 28 52 W 51 2801 N 2 4810 W 51 2801 2 4810 Norton Hill New 1903 100 1966 100 13 6 1503Norton Hill Old Westfield 51 16 48 N 2 28 52 W 51 2801 N 2 4810 W 51 2801 2 4810 Norton Hill Old before 1839 100 1966 101 4 6 1247 In 1908 10 men were killed in a major coal dust explosion 98 Nettlebridge Valley edit nbsp Old mine chimney of Oxley s Colliery near Buckland DinhamThere were numerous coal workings in the area from Gurney Slade east to Mells around the villages of Holcombe Coleford and Stratton on the Fosse These included at least 52 bell pits some with deeper shafts and 16 adits 102 Some coal may have been mined during Roman times and in the 13th century making them the earliest coal mines in Somerset but most development occurred in the 17th century 103 Most mining ended in the 19th century 104 however Strap Colliery was opened in 1953 as Mendip Colliery and worked until 1969 105 The Vobster Breach colliery had a unique system of long coking ovens which along with the other buildings have been designated as a Scheduled monument 30 106 The boiler chimney of Oxley s Colliery near Buckland Dinham which operated for a few years in the 1880s is a Grade II listed building 107 108 Pits of the Nettlebridge ValleyColliery Location Coordinates Opened Closed Shaft diameter ft in m 109 Max shaft depth ft m 109 NotesBarlake Nettlebridge 51 14 03 N 2 30 07 W 51 2342 N 2 5020 W 51 2342 2 5020 Barlake before 1819 1870 5 6 1 7 435 132 6 Bilboa Mells 51 14 56 N 2 24 53 W 51 2489 N 2 4147 W 51 2489 2 4147 Bilboa 240 73 2 Breach Vobster 51 14 20 N 2 26 00 W 51 2389 N 2 4333 W 51 2389 2 4333 Breach 1860 c1880 867 264 2 Charmborough Holcombe 51 15 48 N 2 26 52 W 51 2632 N 2 4478 W 51 2632 2 4478 Charmborough 1932 110 1947 110 8 2 43 111 Coal Barton Coleford 51 14 55 N 2 27 33 W 51 2487 N 2 4591 W 51 2487 2 4591 Coal Barton Scene of a firedamp explosion which killed nine miners in 1869 112 Edford Holcombe 51 14 23 N 2 28 24 W 51 2397 N 2 4734 W 51 2397 2 4734 Edford 1850s 1915 6 1 8 798 243 2 Holcombe Holcombe 51 14 23 N 2 28 24 W 51 2397 N 2 4734 W 51 2397 2 4734 Holcombe 1914 1923 Luckington Coleford 51 15 15 N 2 26 16 W 51 2542 N 2 4377 W 51 2542 2 4377 Luckington 6 1 8 135 41 4 Mackintosh Coleford 51 14 49 N 2 26 10 W 51 2470 N 2 4362 W 51 2470 2 4362 Mackintosh 1867 112 1919 112 8 5 2 6 1620 493 8 Merged with Newbury 1896 45 owned by Westbury Iron Co Ltd Mells Mells 51 15 32 N 2 24 43 W 51 2588 N 2 4120 W 51 2588 2 4120 Mells 1860s till 1880s 105 reopened 1909 till 1943 113 9 2 7 540 164 6 Morewood Old Nettlebridge 51 14 38 N 2 30 49 W 51 2440 N 2 5135 W 51 2440 2 5135 Morewood Old before 1824 1860s 4 6 1 4 1247 380 Morewood New Nettlebridge 51 14 38 N 2 30 49 W 51 2440 N 2 5135 W 51 2440 2 5135 Morewood New 1860s 105 1932 105 9 2 7 888 26 8 Nettlebridge Nettlebridge 51 14 03 N 2 30 07 W 51 2342 N 2 5020 W 51 2342 2 5020 Nettlebridge before 1831 6 1 8 705 214 9 Newbury Coleford 51 15 15 N 2 26 16 W 51 2542 N 2 4377 W 51 2542 2 4377 Newbury 1799 105 1927 49 9 2 7 720 219 4 Merged with Mackintosh 1896 45 owned by Westbury Iron Co Ltd 1908 46 Owned by John Wainwright and Co Ltd New Rock Stratton on the Fosse 51 15 14 N 2 30 13 W 51 2539 N 2 5036 W 51 2539 2 5036 New Rock 1819 114 1968 114 4 6 1 4 1182 360 3 Old Newbury Coleford 51 15 15 N 2 26 16 W 51 2542 N 2 4377 W 51 2542 2 4377 Old Newbury c1710 1790s 250 76 2 Old Rock Nettlebridge 51 14 38 N 2 30 13 W 51 2440 N 2 5035 W 51 2440 2 5035 Old Rock 1786 1873 4 6 1 4 711 216 7 Pitcot Nettlebridge 51 14 36 N 2 29 37 W 51 2432 N 2 4935 W 51 2432 2 4935 Pitcot before 1750 c1820s 5 1 5 555 169 2 Strap also known as Mendip or Downside Colliery Nettlebridge 51 14 29 N 2 30 28 W 51 2413 N 2 5078 W 51 2413 2 5078 Strap 1863 105 1879 105 10 6 3 2 1838 560 2 Deepest shaft on the Somerset coalfield Reopened in 1953 and worked until 1969 105 Sweetleaze Nettlebridge 51 14 29 N 2 30 28 W 51 2413 N 2 5078 W 51 2413 2 5078 Sweetleaze before 1858 1879 Vobster Vobster 51 14 27 N 2 25 24 W 51 2408 N 2 4233 W 51 2408 2 4233 Vobster before 1850s 1884 105 10 3 990 301 8 Had nationally unique long coking oven design 30 References edit a b c A Brief History of the Bristol and Somerset Coalfield The Mines of the Bristol and Somerset Coalfield Archived from the original on 17 January 2009 Retrieved 8 October 2010 a b c Green page 48 a b c Green pages 55 59 Green page 58 Collier page 18 a b Down page 13 Smith s other debt Geoscientist 17 7 July 2007 The Geological Society Retrieved 2 January 2013 Fuller J G C M July 2007 John Strachey William Smith and the strata of England 1719 1801 Geoscientist 17 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